In his first television interview, Giants fan Bryan Stow smiles, speaks and recognizes his mother, father and sisters, but it also becomes painfully clear from the NBC News report that he may never fully recover from a savage beating earlier this year at Dodger Stadium.

“Sometimes he looks right at me,” says a sister, Bonnie Stow, at the San Jose rehabilitation center treating her brother.

“Sometimes there’s no eye contact and you wonder.”

The report was set to air at 10 p.m. Monday on “Rock Center with Brian Williams.”

The network’s chief medical editor, Dr. Nancy Snyderman, opens the segment with a sweeping view of the packed stadium in Los Angeles on opening day of the baseball season.

She cuts to cheerful photos of Stow with several friends wearing orange and black Giants jerseys, and then to photos of Stow in a hospital “unable to walk, barely able to talk and with a third of his brain destroyed.”

One of his friends, Corey Maciel, describes the attack in detail.

“It was a running, huge sweeping punch,” he said of the blow that felled Stow.

“I watched his head bounce off the asphalt and heard it … that sound of bone hitting asphalt.”

Maciel says he and another friend tried to protect Stow with their own bodies, “pleading for these guys to stop,” but the two attackers kept kicking him in the head.

Snyderman includes scenes of sports violence at the stadium before the beating in March.

She also interviewed Bill Plaschke, a sports columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

“There is a thug culture at Dodger Stadium,” he says, adding that fan violence is commonplace at stadiums all over the country. “The violence is increasing. It’s everywhere.”

The report takes viewers into the rehabilitation center in San Jose, where doctors and therapists are treating and painstakingly teaching Stow how to speak and move again.

But Snyderman doesn’t offer an optimistic picture, only a hopeful and loving one.

A trained surgeon, she reports that most of the damage was to Stow’s frontal lobes, which control decision-making, planning and personality. He is fed through a tube and requires 24-hour care.

“Fine,” he says when Snyderman asks how he’s doing. Then he responds, “How are you?”

For much of the report, she kept the camera on Stow’s parents and sisters who visit him regularly. They talk about his quirky sense of humor, their hope when he shows progress and sadness when he regresses.

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